| Henry Ward Beecher - 1863 - 460 pages
...for the well-being of the whole; not to aggrandize itself, but to enrich every State in the Union, from the North to the South, and from the East to the West. The South are prodigal sons; they are wasters; they are destroyers. The North has conservative forces... | |
| Henry Ward Beecher - 1863 - 468 pages
...for the well-being of the whole ; not to aggrandize itself, but to enrich every State in the Union, from the North to the South, and from the East to the West. The South are prodigal sons ; they are wasters ; they are destroyers. The North has conservative forces... | |
| Orator - 1864 - 186 pages
...Angelo with coldness or contempt. We may be assured, gentlemen, that he who really loves the thing itself, loves its finest exhibitions. A true friend...and commemorate them. The voluntary out-pouring of public feeling made to-day, from the north to the south, and from the east to the west, proves this... | |
| Robert Reid - 1864 - 486 pages
...he might have made a fortune by parcelling out the Merkdailly lands, into various streets, leading from the north to the south, and from the east to the west, and crossing each other with as little loss of building ground as possible. On the contrary, however,... | |
| Citizens' Association of New York. Council of Hygiene and Public Health - 1865 - 590 pages
...Tenth Avenue is much better, as the foregoing table of altitude shows, the ground having an inclination from the north to the south, and from the east to the west. THOROUGHFARES. — The cross streets run nearly northeast and southwest, the avenues crossing them... | |
| jackson, walford, and hodder - 1866 - 936 pages
...capital ; but we cannot expect to evangelize Madagascar, to extend Christianity over the whole island, from the north to the south, and from the east to the west, from sea to sea. Wo can only establish the Gospel at certain points. We have from the beginning selected... | |
| United States. Census Office 8th Census, 1860 - 1866 - 688 pages
...several districts, except the Pacific district. In the Atlantic and Mississippi regions it increased from the north to the south and from the east to the west, except that the southeast suffered from it in a invatrr proportion than the southwest. The deaths from... | |
| Daniel Stevens Dickinson - 1867 - 750 pages
...the fact that they have been and are in the enjoyment of civil and religious freedom. And so it was from the North to the South, and from the East to the West; with over thirty millions of people, unoppressed by government, but every one enjoying the fruit of... | |
| Wallace A. Brice - 1868 - 402 pages
...the Miamis had the happiness to own, and through which all the good words of their chiefs had to pass from the north to the south, and from the east to the west," how many such solemn and interesting occasions as that of exchanging the friendly calumet and entertaining... | |
| Joseph Edwards Carpenter - 1869 - 596 pages
...Angelo with coldness or contempt. We may be assured, gentlemen, that he who really loves the thing itself, loves its finest exhibitions. A true friend...country loves her friends and benefactors, and thinks Webster's Eulogium on Washington. 301 it no degradation to commend and commemorate them. The voluntary... | |
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